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October 03, 1958 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1958-10-03

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Former Israel Prime Minis-
ter Moshe Sharett is coming
here this month to spur the
intensive Fall phase of the
1958 Israel Bond campaign,
which seeks to
raise a mini-
mum of $50,-
0 00,000 be-
tween now
the end of the
year. Sharett
will speak at
Israel Bond
meetings in
key communi-
ties through-
out the United
States and
Canada. T h e
former Prime
Minister, w h o
Sharett
also served as
Israel's first Foreign Minister,
has taken a leading role in the
Israel Bond drive on previous
visits to North America. He
was one of the principal speak-
ers at the recent International
Mobilization Conference for Is-
rael Bonds in Jerusalem.

Alphabet Allies : Soviet
with Nasser at UN

UNITED NATIONS (AJP)—
Alphabetical seatings of dele-
gations during General Assem-
blies in the main auditorium—
appearing differently at each
session according to the slip
drawn from the ballot box—
often make strange bedfellows.
At this session, however, the
seatings are more consistent
with the political alignments.
For example, Nasser's United
Arab Republic delegation is
seated in the same row with
that of the Soviet Union headed
by Mr. Gromyko. The United
States and Britain (United
Kingdom) are together, and so
are Israel and Ireland. Before
the increase of membership,
ISrael found herself squeezed
in between two Arab states—
Iraq and Lebanon—a rather un-
pleasant predicament.

Tourist Purchases
in Israel Rise 850a0

The great influx of tourists
and the recently introduced
20% discount on goods bought
in foreign currency were major
factors in the steep purchase
rise of tourists goods in Israel.
During the first 6 months of
1958, recommended shops sold
almost $500,000 worth of goods
as compared with $60,000 sold
the first six months of 1957.
This marks an increase of al-
most 850%. Tourist purchases
were particularly brisk in
clothes, furs and records.

IF YOU TURN THE
• V•Cle rit

UPSIDE DOWN YOU WON'T
FIND A FINER WINE THAN

Kasd,62e

and now you can enjoy

NEW EXCITING
SENSATIONAL
TASTE

IT'S A CHOICE MELLOW
WINE WITH NATURAL
FRUIT FLAVORS TO GIVE
A NEW AND DIFFERENT
TASTE. IT CAN BE USED IN
MIXED DRINKS, ON THE
ROCKS OR WITH ICE AND
SODA. NATURE BOY IS
MADE BY CADILLAC CLUB,
THE LARGEST SELLING
WINE IN MICHIGAN.

Milan Wineries, Detroit, Mich.

Ben-Gurion Sends Ghana
Poland Cooperates with OUT ' Premier
Gift of Plane
(JTA)—Prem--
Schools, Dr. Haber Reports ier JERUSALEM.
David Ben-Gurion has sent a

NEW YORK (JTA)
More
than 30,000 students are ex-
pected to enroll in vocational
schools of ORT, the Organiza-
tion for Rehabilitation through
Training, during the school year
now beginning, according to a
report today by Dr. William
Haber. president of the Ameri-
can ORT Federation.
Dr. Haber, who has just re-
turned from a survey of ORT
activities in Israel, Iran, Poland
and Switzerland, made his re-
port to a meeting of the execu-
tive committee of his organiza-
tion at Hotel Commodore. The
Polish authorities, which in-
vited ORT to establish training
programs for Jewish repatriates,
have thus far been cooperative,
Dr. Haber stated. They have

Rabbis Condemn
`Going-Steady'
by Teen-Alters

MINNEAPOLIS (JTA)—"Go-
ing steady" by Jewish teen-
agers was vigorously con-
demned by the Minnesota Rab-
binical Association which
termed that practice "incon-
sonant with Jewish ideals of
marriage."
The rabbis urged Jewish par-
ents to do all they could to
persuade their teen-age chil-
dren "to enjoy group friend-
ship and companionship." In
a formal statement, the rabbis
said such dating should be
postponed until the Jewish
young people were "mature
enough to consider seriously
the responsibility of marriage."
"We wish strongly to empha-
size the fact that "going
steady" among teen-agers is un-
wise and unhealthy and should
be firmly discouraged," the
rabbis declared. "It can lead
to undesirable emotional in-
volvements and harmful temp-
tation and frustration for both
the boy and the girl."
The rabbinical leaders added
they "emphactically" affirmed
"the traditional Jewish values
toward self-respect and healthy
sex feelings which should be
expressed only through the
marriage bond."
The rabbis urged Jewish par-
ents to encourage teen-age chil-
dren "to enjoy group friend-
ships and companionship" and
to participate in such activities
as sports, dramatics, school
projects, synagogue clubs and
religious services. They de-
clared it was a parental re-
sponsibility "to provide for the
teen-agers and the friends the
opportunity for recreation and
religious worship in the home
and in the family."

Ben-Curion Marks 72nd
Birthday in Privacy

JERUSALEM, (JTA) — Pre-
mier David Ben-Gurion marked
on Sept. 29 his 72nd birthday
in the usual quiet and privacy
of a holiday retreat.
Observers have been im-
pressed with the Premier's
brisk manner and gait, his
good health and his failure to
evince either fatigue with his
man-killing responsibilities or
to lay aside his work. Inti-
mates report that he continues
his regular strenuous physical
exercises, including some which
require him to stand on his
head.
(The Times of London, in a
Jerusalem dispatch, termed
Ben-Gurion as fit today "to
hold the reins of office as he
has ever been in spite of all
the difficulties he has had to
face since 1906 when he first
emigrated to Palestine from
Eastern Europe." The Times
added that "his enthusiasm
and vigor remained un-
dimmed.")

Piper Cub plane as a personal
gift to Premier Kwame Nkru-
mah of Ghana, on the occasion
of Ghana's first anniversary of
independence.

placed regular trade school fa-
cilities at OR.T's disposal. Dur-
ing the nine months of its ac-
tivities in Poland, ORT has set
up classes for 2,000 persons in
18 cities.
Dr. -_.-Iaber reported that voca-
tional education in Israel was
probably one of the fastest
growing school programs in the
world. In the ORT schools alone
enrollment is increasing by one-
third annually. Nevertheless.
Israeli trade schools are not
keeping up with the ground-
swell of youth seeking admis-
sion, nor with the requirements
of industry for a steadily larger
flow of trained personnel.
A two-front educational de-
bate is shaping up in Israel,
which could have far-reaching
effects socially and economical-
ly, Dr. Haber told the commit-
tee. On the one hand .is the
effort by educators to raise
school standards. On the other,
is the threat that such standards
tend to bar large numbers of
youth, especially those from
Oriental and North African im-
migrant families, who are most
in need of social integration.
Dr. Haber urged a serious
search for flexible educational
forms and a far greater alloca-
tion of resources to all second-
ary education in Israel. A spe-
cial program of vocational
instruction for immigrant young-
sters, tied-in to the state prim-
ary school system instituted by
ORT a few weeks ago, has
proven successful. Dr. Haber
pointed to the new Syngalowski
Vocational Center at Tel Aviv,
built by Women's American
ORT, in which the first classes
are now opening as a "model
for the future." He described
it as "a new standard" for trade
schools in Israel.
George J. Mintzer, committee
chairman announced that a
bequest of $25,000 had been re-
ceived from the estate of the
noted philanthropist and art
collector, Wilhelm Weinberg, to
be used to purchase . premises
for an ORT school in Rome.

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3 -THE DE TROIT JE WI SH NEWS

Sharett to Be in U.S
on Israel Bond Tour

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